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Panel: A New Era of Open? COVID-19 and the Pursuit for Equitable Solutions

jeudi 25 février 2021 à 15:57

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Creative Commons published an article titled, “Now Is the Time for Open Access Policies—Here’s Why” in March 2020. A lot has changed since then and it’s important to assess the progress made and take a hard look at the dangers ahead.

In this panel, we’ll examine the fields of Open Data, Open Science, and Open Source Medical Hardware with leading experts and practitioners, asking questions like: “What does “open” mean in the COVID-19 context?” “What role can open access and the open community play in ensuring there is timely and equitable access to medical and scientific research outputs and data, vaccines and treatments?” “Can open science and open data help prevent the next pandemic?” “What legal tools should be used to expedite the manufacturing of vaccines?” “How can we balance individual privacy with the need to share information about genome variation and patterns of infection?”

Panellists include: 

Date: Tuesday, 16 March 2021
Time: 11:00 – 12:20 EST/15:00 – 16:20 GMT/16:00 – 17:20 CET
Location: Anywhere and everywhere! We’ll be using a virtual platform called Hopin to host the event.

Join us as we attempt to map out the present and the future of “open” in the era of COVID-19! 

Pay-What-You-Can Registration: We’re aiming to make this event as accessible to as many participants as possible. All ticket holders receive the same access to the event. Register by Monday, 15 March!

The post Panel: A New Era of Open? COVID-19 and the Pursuit for Equitable Solutions appeared first on Creative Commons.

Open Minds: Celebrating Smithsonian Open Access With Effie Kapsalis

mercredi 24 février 2021 à 16:04

In two days, the Smithsonian will celebrate one year of Smithsonian Open Access. This initiative removed copyright restrictions from 2.8 million digital collection 2D and 3D images and nearly two centuries of data using Creative Commons’ public domain dedication tool (CC0). Launched just before many of us went into lockdown due to COVID-19, Smithsonian Open Access unexpectedly became an invaluable resource for parents and educators alike as traditional education was disrupted due to the pandemic. 

Effie Kapsalis To mark this occasion, we reconnected with Effie Kapsalis (Senior Digital Program Officer, Smithsonian) for our new 20th-anniversary podcast, “Open Minds…from Creative Commons.”

In this episode, we talk through the history of Smithsonian Open Access, including the years of research and collaboration it took to get the initiative launched, where it’s going as new challenges have emerged (e.g. mis/disinformation on digital platforms), and Effie’s personal advice for other open advocates in the cultural heritage sector. Hint: Leverage research like this paper!

The value of open “was always to be able to include many hands in the work we have to do to make this live on into perpetuity.” 

You’ll leave this episode energized by Effie’s telling of the journey of Smithsonian Open Access, which has undoubtedly reaffirmed her belief in the power and the value of open access. “We had a class of graduate data [visualization] students from Parsons [School of Design] this last semester and they created these really delightful explorations of different pockets of our collections,” she explained, “This is the value of open—it was always to be able to include many hands in the work we have to do to make this live on into perpetuity.” 

Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, SoundCloud, and more. You can also subscribe via the show’s RSS feed.

We hope you enjoy the show. Please subscribe to it in whatever podcast app you use, so you don’t miss any of our conversations with people working to make the internet and our global culture more open and collaborative.

The post Open Minds: Celebrating Smithsonian Open Access With Effie Kapsalis appeared first on Creative Commons.

Announcing Our New Podcast: “Open Minds … from Creative Commons”

vendredi 19 février 2021 à 17:28

Today we’re excited to launch a new podcast called Open Minds … from Creative Commons.

It’s CC’s 20th anniversary this year. And to celebrate, we decided to launch this show, a series of conversations with people working on the issues we’re involved with and excited about. Expect Open Minds to feature folks from the worlds of open culture, open education, open science, open technology, and more. Expect interesting people with interesting ideas to share about sharing.

For our debut episode, we spoke with Creative Commons CEO Catherine Stihler. It seemed like a good place to start—hearing from our organization’s new leader about her career and her vision for what’s next for the Creative Commons movement.

Listen on Spotify, SoundCloud, and more (Apple Podcasts coming soon). You can also subscribe via the show’s RSS feed.

We hope you enjoy the show. Please subscribe to it in whatever podcast app you use, so you don’t miss any of our conversations with people working to make the internet and our global culture more open and collaborative.

The post Announcing Our New Podcast: “Open Minds … from Creative Commons” appeared first on Creative Commons.

Save the Date for the 2021 CC Summit!

mardi 16 février 2021 à 17:05

We’ve grown the CC Global Summit every year, with over 1300 participants and 200 presenters joining us in 2020 for discussion and debate, workshops and planning, talks and community building.

After consulting with our community, we’re excited to build on the success of last year’s virtual event and host the second-ever virtual CC Global Summit from 20-24 September 2021! Join thousands of leading activists, advocates, librarians, educators, lawyers, technologists, and more to discuss a range of topics, from the future of open and the unknowns of artificial intelligence to the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on open science.

For now, mark 20-24 September in your calendars and relive last year’s CC Summit by watching the keynotes or reading this summary

The post Save the Date for the 2021 CC Summit! appeared first on Creative Commons.

Meet CC South Africa, Our Next Feature for CC Network Fridays!

vendredi 12 février 2021 à 16:26

After introducing the CC Italy Chapter to you in July, the CC Netherlands Chapter in August, CC Bangladesh Chapter in September, CC Tanzania Chapter in October, and the CC India Chapter in November, the CC Mexico Chapter in December, and CC Argentina Chapter in January, we are now travelling to Africa to introduce the CC South Africa Chapter! 

The Creative Commons Global Network (CCGN) consists of 48 CC Country Chapters spread across the globe. They’re the home for a community of advocates, activists, educators, artists, lawyers, and users who share CC’s vision and values. They implement and strengthen open access policies, copyright reform, open education, and open culture in the communities in which they live.

To help showcase their work, we’re excited to continue our blog series and social media initiative: CC Network Fridays. At least one Friday a month, we’re traveling around the world through our blog and on Twitter (using #CCNetworkFridays) to a different CC Chapter, introducing their teams, discussing their work, and celebrating their commitment to open! 


Say hello to CC South Africa!

The CC South Africa Chapter was formed in 2019. Its Chapter Lead is Paul West and its representative to the CC Global Network Council is Derek Moore. CC South Africa is a loose, value network of South African people and organizations who support the ideals and practices of the open movement. Members of the Chapter are committed to promoting and enabling the legal sharing of creative works, education, and other works with others. For this post, we spoke to Paul and Derek who told us a bit more about the Chapter’s work. 

CC: What open movement work is your Chapter actively involved in? What would you like to achieve with your work? 

CC South Africa: We supported the approval of the copyright amendment bill and objected to ongoing delays by SA Presidency in signing it into law. The Bill is being held up for issues, including resistance by international lobbies that are opposed to developing countries including FAIR USE in their copyright legislation. You can find more information by following @DeniseNicholson and in this article.  

We also work with Open Content Finder, a collaboratively-sourced directory of #OER for teaching and learning materials. @OpenUCT content carries CC licenses. Find out more here and by following @GlenCox

We were involved with the #feesmustfall resources for online and blended learning that were developed by four South African universities (UP, UJ. UCT & UFS) and were shared as open educational resources (CC BY SA NC) with other higher education institutions in South Africa. 

CC: What exciting project has your Chapter engaged in recently?

CC South Africa: We work with the @UNESCOICT4D which resulted in the report “Education for the most marginalised post‑COVID-19” and guidance note “Sharing open educational resources (OER) with Creative Commons (CC) open licenses“. For more information follow @PGWest

CC: What do you find inspiring and rewarding about your work in the open movement?

CC South Africa: Working in the open movement helps us create OPEN learning systems in 2021 that will provide free access to download, retain, reuse, revise, remix and redistribute to others. These require CC #OER licenses. See the guidance note and follow @CCSA and @PGWest for more information.

The “Open Umbrella” is a self-evaluation tool & field-guide, intended for online education. This OER offers manageable steps to course improvement. Future plans include 8 self-study modules, webinars & workshops over 3 years. For more information follow @weblearning.

CC: What are your plans for the future? 

CC South Africa: Especially for the rest of the pandemic, we will continue to meet and conduct encouraging messages using video conferences and newsy emails. Members are being encouraged to develop their own projects and share information on projects that include CC licenses through the Chapter. 

CC: What projects in your country are using CC licenses that you’d like to highlight? 

CC South Africa: 

Early reading projects (Bookdash and African Storybook) are making a significant impact and their work is being enabled with Creative Commons

CC: Anything else you want to share?

CC South Africa: Our Chapter membership has reached 50 people and there is even some interest from individuals in neighboring countries where Chapters have not yet been established. Everyone with a common interest to promote open education with CC licenses and to collaborate constructively with others is invited.

Thank you to the CC South Africa team, especially Paul and Derek for contributing to the CC Network Fridays feature, and for all of their work in the open community! To see this conversation on Twitter, click here. To become a member of the CCGN, visit our website!

📸: Featured image has icons by Guilherme Furtado and Vectors Point via Noun Project (CC BY 3.0).

The post Meet CC South Africa, Our Next Feature for CC Network Fridays! appeared first on Creative Commons.